Date: September 30, 2019
Source: McMaster University
Summary:
Contrary to previous advice, five new systematic reviews suggest that
most people can continue to eat red and processed meat as they do now.
The major studies have found cutting back has little impact on health.
Read the whole article here: No need to cut down red and processed meat, controversial findings suggest.
Here are some excerpts:
A
panel of international scientists systematically reviewed the evidence
and have recommended that most adults should continue to eat their
current levels of red and processed meat.
The
researchers performed four systematic reviews focused on randomized
controlled trials and observational studies looking at the impact of red
meat and processed meat consumption on cardiometabolic and cancer
outcomes.
In one review of 12 trials with 54,000
people, the researchers did not find statistically significant or an
important association between meat consumption and the risk of heart
disease, diabetes or cancer.
In three systematic
reviews of cohort studies following millions of people, a very small
reduction in risk among those who had three fewer servings of red or
processed meat a week, but the association was uncertain.
McMaster
professor Gordon Guyatt, chair of the guideline committee, said the
research group with a panel of 14 members from seven countries used a
rigorous systematic review methodology, and GRADE methods which rate the
certainty of evidence for each outcome, to move from evidence to
dietary recommendations to develop their guidelines.
"There
is a worldwide interest in nutrition and the issue of red meat in
particular. People need to be able to make decisions about their own
diet based on the best information available," he said.
Bradley
Johnston, corresponding author on the reviews and guideline, said the
research team realizes its work is contrary to many current nutritional
guidelines.
"This is not just another study on red and
processed meat, but a series of high quality systematic reviews
resulting in recommendations we think are far more transparent, robust
and reliable," said Johnston, who is a part-time associate professor at
McMaster and an associate professor of community health and epidemiology
at Dalhousie.
The accompanying editorial by authors at
the Indiana University School of Medicine said: "This is sure to be
controversial, but is based on the most comprehensive review of the
evidence to date. Because that review is inclusive, those who seek to
dispute it will be hard pressed to find appropriate evidence with which
to build an argument."
Other researchers involved in
the work included those from the Netherlands, Poland and Spain,
including the Iberoamerican Cochrane and Polish Cochrane centres and the
guideline committee included lay people as well as the scientists. Dena
Zeraatkar and Mi Ah Han, a visiting professor from South Korea, also
had leadership roles on the McMaster team working on the reviews.
There were no primary external funding sources.
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